Finance:EasyGrowth Treasury Receipts

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EasyGrowth Treasury Receipts (ETRs or 'eaters') are fixed income securities issued by Dean Witter Reynolds (later Morgan Stanley) in the 1980s. ETRs are zero-coupon bonds because they trade at a discount to par value (which is usually $1,000) and they mature at par. Throughout their life they pay no interest, as it accrues as principal instead. For example, ETRs that mature in 10 years might cost $600 today for one bond that will be valued at $1,000 (par) in 10 years.

ETRs are also categorized as treasury receipts because the underlying securities are US Treasury Bonds, therefore all payments are backed by U.S. Treasury securities. The most liquid zero-coupon bonds in the United States are called STRIPS; these are created by taking apart (or stripping) the coupons off of US Treasury Bonds.

ETRs are no longer created because STRIPS are now the product of choice in this category due to their excellent liquidity and because they can be created (stripped) by any financial institution. Other firms in the United States created treasury receipts such as TBRs (E.F. Hutton), TIGRs (Merrill Lynch), CATS (Salomon Brothers) and COUGRs (A. G. Becker). Most treasury receipts were nicknamed after animals such as 'teddy bears' (TBRs), 'tigers' (TIGRs), 'cats' (CATS) and 'cougars' (COUGRs) but ETRs were named after a common fictitious character of the 1980s, E.T. from the hit movie.

See also